The World Cup record that will change hands three times in 72 hours

· Yahoo Sports

Photo by Luke Hales/Getty Images

The first unusual record story of the 2026 World Cup is not about a player, a goal or even a result. It centres on the managers standing on the touchline.

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The record in question is for the oldest manager to take charge of a World Cup match. It started the tournament with Otto Rehhagel, but did not stay put for long.

Across the first 72 hours, the record shifted in an unusual sequence. Hugo Broos and Miroslav Koubek both moved it on, while Dick Advocaat was lined up as the next in line.

Hugo Broos and Miroslav Koubek quickly set new marks

Photo by Lars Baron/Getty Images

Otto Rehhagel had held the record since 2010, when he managed Greece against Argentina at 71 years and 317 days old.

That mark was broken on the opening day of the 2026 tournament. Hugo Broos became the oldest manager in World Cup history when South Africa faced Mexico aged 74 years, two months and one day.

The record did not last long. Miroslav Koubek then took charge of Czechia aged 74 years, nine months and 10 days, moving the mark on again.

Dick Advocaat could complete a remarkable three-day sequence

The third part of the sequence centres on Curaçao. Dick Advocaat was listed as the next manager in line, at 78 years, eight months and 15 days.

This part of the story needs careful phrasing. Questions remained over Advocaat’s role with Curaçao, so the record remains lined up rather than confirmed until he is seen on the touchline.

Even so, it is an unusual early storyline for a World Cup. Before the tournament had settled, its oldest-manager record had already become a moving target.

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